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33 Policies: SWAP 8.1 Notwithstanding the Community Development foundation component designation of this Policy Area, lots fronting onto the south side of Keller Road (or, if no lots front on Keller Road, the most northerly row of lots) shall maintain a minimum lot area of one-half acre. In the event that this Policy Area is the subject of a land division proposing to establish any lots smaller than one-half acre, the first two rows of lots southerly of Keller Road shall maintain a minimum net lot size of 30,000 square feet. Leon/Keller Road Policy Area Notwithstanding the Estate Density Residential designation of this area on the Southwest Area Plan map, the Leon/Keller Road Policy Area may only be developed at a maximum residential intensity of one (1) dwelling unit per 22 acres. The Leon/Keller Road Policy Area also extends into the Sun City/Menifee Area Plan.
The purpose of the Highway 79 Policy Area is to address transportation infrastructure capacity within the policy area. Applicable policies are also located in the Circulation Element of the General Plan.
SWAP 9.1 Accelerate the construction of transportation infrastructure in the Highway 79 Policy Area
. The County of Riverside shall require that all new development projects demonstrate adequate transportation infrastructure capacity to accommodate the added traffic growth. The County of Riverside shall coordinate with cities adjacent to the policy area
to accelerate the usable revenue flow of existing funding programs, thus assuring that expediting the development of the transportation infrastructure is in place when needed . SWAP 9.2 Establish
a program in the Highway 79 Policy Area to ensure that overall trip generation does not exceed system capacity and that the system operation continues to meet Level of Service standards. In general, the program would establish guidelines to be incorporated into individual Traffic Impact Analysis that would monitor overall trip generation from residential development to ensure that overall within the Highway 79 Policy Area development projects produce traffic generation at a level that is 9% less than the trips projected from the General Plan traffic model residential land use designations. Individually, projects could exceed the General Plan traffic model trip generation level, provided it can be demonstrated that sufficient reductions have occurred on other projects in order to meet Level of Service standards.
Diamond Valley Lake (DVL) is a recently built, approximately 800,000-acre-foot capacity reservoir owned and operated by the Metropolitan Water District (MWD), which provides domestic water supplies to much of
County of Riverside General Plan Amendment No. 960 34 Public Review Draft March 2014 Southern California. Diamond Valley Lake is strategically located, with ample adjacent land, to also provide for a wide variety of recreational opportunities for the residents of Riverside County and Southern California, and beyond. Potential recreational opportunities include, but are not limited to, fishing, boating, camping, golfing, picnicking, bicycling, horseback riding, and hiking. In support of recreational facilities, other tourist-oriented facilities including hotels, restaurants, and commercial services are anticipated to be developed in the future. The County of Riverside will continue to cooperate with MWD and Diamond Valley Lake's other neighboring jurisdiction, the City of Hemet, to encourage development of the lake's recreational opportunities and supporting commercial services. It is envisioned that Diamond Valley Lake's recreational and tourist-oriented facilities will be developed pursuant to one or more specific plans contained within the policy area. The Harvest Valley/Winchester, Southwest, and San Jacinto Valley Area Plans illustrate MWD's concept, at the time of the adoption of the Riverside County General Plan, for the potential future development of the DVL lands. Following are the policies for development in the Diamond Valley Lake Policy Area (DVLPA):
SWAP 10.1 Continue cooperating with the Metropolitan Water District and the City of Hemet to encourage the development of a comprehensive program for recreational and support commercial facilities at Diamond Valley Lake. SWAP 10.2 All development shall occur through specific plans. Any specific plans adopted in the Diamond Valley Lake Policy Area shall be classified as Community Development Specific Plans. SWAP 10.3 The Diamond Valley Lake Policy Area, in its entirety, is included in the Highway 79 Policy Area (Circulation Element Polic yies C 2.6
).
SWAP 10.4 Provided that total development intensity for the entire Diamond Valley Lake Policy Area is not increased beyond the level of development intensity established for this area at the time of the adoption of the General Plan, no general plan amendments shall be required to be filed and approved in order to authorize changes in mapped general plan designations, provided that any such changes are approved through specific plan applications (specific plans, specific plan amendments, substantial conformances, as appropriate). The approved specific plan applications will constitute the General Plan Element mapped land use designations for the areas so affected. In the event that total development intensity for the entire DVLPA would be exceeded due to any development proposal within the area, the application must be accompanied by, and approved through, a general plan amendment (GPA) application. No such GPA shall be subject to the General Plan Certainty System's eight-year amendment cycle and other procedural requirements applicable to Foundation Component amendments. Any such amendment shall be deemed an Entitlement/Policy amendment and be subject to the procedural requirements applicable to that category of amendments.
The French Valley Airport is an active airport located easterly approximately 2 miles west of the City of Murrieta and 2 miles north of the City of Temecula. The boundary of the French Valley Airport Influence Area is shown in Figure 4, Overlays and Policy Areas. There are a number of Compatibility Zones safety zones associated with the Airport Influence Area. These
are shown in Figure 5, French Valley Airport Influence Policy
Area. Properties within these zones are subject to regulations governing such issues as County of Riverside General Plan Amendment No. 960 Public Review Draft March 2014 35 development intensity, density, height of structures, and noise. These land use restrictions are fully set forth in Appendix L
, and are summarized in Table 4, Airport Land Use Compatibility Criteria for Riverside County (Applicable to French Valley Airport). Guidelines for Airport Safety Zones for French Valley, Desert Center, Blythe, Corona, Chiriaco Summit, Banning, Desert Resorts Regional, and Riverside Airports. For more information on these zones and additional airport policies, refer to Appendix L -1 ,
and the Land Use, Circulation, Safety and Noise Elements of the Riverside County General Plan. Policies: SWAP 11.1 To provide for the orderly development of French Valley Airport and the surrounding area
, comply with the Airport Land Use Compatibility Plan for French Valley Airport as fully set forth in Appendix L -1 and as summarized in Table 4, as well as any applicable policies related to airports in the Land Use, Circulation, Safety and Noise Elements of the Riverside County General Plan. Specific Plan Required The Harvest Valley/Winchester Area Plan and the Southwest Area Plan reference a “Specific Plan Required” area that reflects the general land uses contained in Specific Plan No. 310. The County's approval of Specific Plan No. 310 and its certification of the related environmental impact report have been set aside consistent with the Riverside County Superior Court's ruling in Case Nos. RIC369801 and 369989, pending certification of a subsequent or supplemental environmental impact report. No development will be allowed to proceed within the “Specific Plan Required” area until a subsequent or supplemental environmental impact report is prepared and certified and a specific plan is finally approved for that area. Final approval of a specific plan within the “Specific Plan Required” area will not require an amendment to the Land Use Element of the General Plan.
Specific plans are identified in this section as Policy Areas because detailed study and development direction is provided in each plan. Please refer to Table 3, Adopted Specific Plans in the Southwest Area Plan, for specific plan names and numbers that are located in the Southwest planning area. Policies related to any listed specific plan can be reviewed at the Riverside County Planning Department. Specific plans are highly customized policy or regulatory tools that provide a bridge between the General Plan and individual development projects in a more area-specific manner than is possible with community-wide zoning ordinances. The specific plan is a tool that provides land use and development standards that are tailored to respond to special conditions and aspirations unique to the area being proposed for development. These tools are a means of addressing detailed concerns that conventional zoning cannot do. The twelve
eleven specific plans located in the Southwest planning area are listed in Table 3, Adopted Specific Plans in the Southwest Area Plan. Each of these specific plans is determined to be a Community Development Specific Plan, with the exception of Johnson Ranch, which was initially approved as a Community Development Specific Plan but has subsequently been purchased for habitat conservation. The approval of the Johnson Ranch Specific Plan will be considered for rescission during the initial round of Specific Plan reviews.
preparation of Specific Plans is found in the California Government Code, Sections 65450 through 65457.
County of Riverside General Plan Amendment No. 960 36 Public Review Draft March 2014 Table 3: Adopted Specific Plans in the Southwest Area Plan Specific Plan Specific Plan # Dutch Village 106 Rancho Bella Vista 184 Winchester Properties 213 Red Hawk 217 Vail Ranch 223 Crown Valley Village 238 Borel Air Park 265 Quinta Do Lago 284 Winchester 1800 286 Johnson Ranch 307 French Valley 312 Morgan Hill 313 Domenigoni/Barton Properties* 310 Source: Riverside County Planning Department. *Portions of this specific plan extend into a neighboring Area Plan Table 4: Land Use Compatibility Guidelines for Airport Safety Zones for French Valley, Desert Center, Blythe, Corona, Chiriaco Summit, Banning, Desert Resorts Regional, and Riverside Airports Safety Zone Maximum Population Density Maximum Coverage by Structures Land Use ETZ - Emergency Touchdown Zone 0 1 0 1
2
ISZ - Inner Safety Zone 0 1 0 1 No petroleum or explosive No above-grade powerlines OSZ - Outer Safety Zone Uses in structures 3 :
source document for the Comprehensive Land Use Plan for explanation) Uses not in structures: 50 persons/ac. 25% of net area No residential No hotels, motels No restaurants, bars No schools, hospitals, government services No concert halls, auditoriums No stadiums, arenas No public utility stations, plants No public communications facilities No uses involving, as the primary activity, manufacture, storage, or distribution of explosives or flammable materials. ERC - Extended Runway Centerline Zone 3 du/net acre Uses in structures 3 :
source document for the Comprehensive Land Use Plan for explanation) 50% of gross area or 65% of net area whichever is greater No uses involving, as the primary activity, manufacture, storage, or distribution of explosives or flammable materials. 4
Pattern Zone Not Applicable 50% of gross area or
65% of net area whichever is greater
Discourage schools, auditoriums, amphitheaters, stadiums 5
manufacture, storage, or distribution of explosives or flammable materials. 4,5
County of Riverside General Plan Amendment No. 960 Public Review Draft March 2014 37 Safety Zone Maximum Population Density Maximum Coverage by Structures Land Use NOTES:
A. The following uses shall be prohibited in all airport safety zones: (1) Any use which would direct a steady light or flashing light or red, white, green, or amber colors associated with airport operations toward an aircraft engaged in an initial straight climb following takeoff or toward an aircraft engaged in a straight final approach toward a landing at an airport, other than an FAA approved navigational signal light or visual approach slope indicator. (2) Any use which would cause sunlight to be reflected toward an aircraft engaged in an initial straight climb following takeoff or toward an aircraft engaged in a straight final approach toward a landing at an airport. (3) Any use which would generate smoke or water vapor or which would attract large concentrations or birds, or which may otherwise affect safe air navigation within the area. (4) Any use which would generate electrical interference that may be detrimental to the operation of aircraft and/or aircraft instrumentation. B. Avigation easements shall be secured through dedication for all land uses permitted in any safety zone. _____________________________ 1 No structures permitted in ETZ or ISZ. 2 Significant obstructions include, but are not limited to, large trees, heavy fences and walls, tall and steep berms and retaining walls, non-frangible street light and sign standards, billboards. 3 A Astructure@ includes fully enclosed buildings and other facilities involving fixed seating and enclosures limiting the mobility of people, such as sports stadiums, outdoor arenas, and amphitheaters. 4 This does not apply to service stations involving retail sale of motor vehicle fuel if fuel storage tanks are installed underground. 5 Within the TPZ safety zone, a variety of land uses are to be discouraged from being developed. When development of these uses is proposed, the Airport Land Use Commission shall require the applicant to show that alternative locations have been considered and are not feasible. The applicant shall then be directed to consider a development plan that will minimize the exposure to hazard as much as possible. This might involve reducing structure heights, reducing lot coverage, or reducing there overall scale of the project, considering satellite locations for some of the proposed functions of the facility. Land uses described as Auses to be discouraged@ which were lawfully established prior to the adoption of the Comprehensive Land Use Plan shall be permitted to be modified or enlarged provided that avigation easements are granted to Riverside County. Source: Extracted from Riverside County Airport Land Use Commission Comprehensive Land Use Plan Table 4: Airport Land Use Compatibility Criteria for Riverside County (Applicable to French Valley Airport) Zone Locations Maximum Densities/Intensities Additional Criteria Residential (d.u./ac) 1 Other Uses (people/ac) 2 Req’d Open Land 3 Prohibited Uses 4 Other Development Conditions 5 Aver- age 6 Single Acre 7 with Bonus 8 A Runway
Protection Zone
and within
Building Restriction Line 0
0 0 All Remain- ing
All structures except ones with location set by aeronautical function
Objects exceeding FAR Part 77 height limits
Storage of hazardous materials
9
Avigation easement dedication
Inner
Approach/ Departure Zone 0.05
(average parcel size 20.0 ac.) 40
45 50
80 90
100 104
117 130
30% 35%
40%
Children’s schools, day care centers, libraries
Places of worship
Bldgs with >2 aboveground habitable floors
Highly noise-sensitive outdoor nonresidential uses 10
Aboveground bulk storage of hazardous materials 11
Critical community infrastructure facilities 12
Hazards to flight 9
Locate structures maximum distance from extended runway centerline
idences (including mobile homes) and office buildings 13
Airspace review required for objects >35 feet tall 14
Avigation easement dedication
County of Riverside General Plan Amendment No. 960 38 Public Review Draft March 2014 Zone Locations Maximum Densities/Intensities Additional Criteria Residential (d.u./ac) 1 Other Uses (people/ac) 2 Req’d Open Land 3 Prohibited Uses 4 Other Development Conditions 5 Aver- age 6 Single Acre 7 with Bonus 8 B2 Adjacent to Runway 0.1
(average parcel size 10.0 ac.) 100
200 260
No Req’t
Same as Zone B1, except that buildings may have up to 3 above ground habitable floors.
distance from runway
Minimum NLR of 25 dB in res- idences (including mobile homes) and office buildings 13
Airspace review required for objects >35 feet tall 14
Avigation easement dedication
C Extended Approach/ Departure Zone 0.2
(average parcel size 5.0 ac.) 80
90 100
160
180 200
208 234
260 20%
25% 30%
Children’s schools, day care centers, libraries
Hospitals, nursing homes
Bldgs with >3 aboveground habitable floors
nonresidential uses 10
Hazards to flight 9
Minimum NLR of 20 dB in res- idences (including mobile homes) and office buildings 13
Airspace review required for objects >70 feet tall 15
Deed notice required D Primary
Traffic Patterns and Runway
Buffer Area (1) 0.2 (average parcel size 5.0 ac.) or
16
(2) 5.0 (average parcel size 0.2 ac.) 19
150
450 585
10%
Highly noise-sensitive outdoor nonresidential uses 10
Hazards to flight 9
Airspace review required for objects >70 feet tall 15
Children’s schools, hospitals, nursing homes discouraged 17
Deed notice required
E Other
Airport Environs No Limit
No Limit 18
No
Req’t
Hazards to flight 9
Airspace review required for objects >100 feet tall 15
Major spectator-oriented sports stadiums, amphitheaters, concert halls discouraged beneath principal flight tracks 18
Height Review
Overlay Same as Underlying Compatibility Zone Not
Applic- able
Same as Underlying Compatibility Zone
Airspace review required for objects >35 feet tall 14
Avigation easement dedication Notes:
1 Residential development must not contain more than the indicated number of dwelling units (excluding secondary units) per gross acre. Clustering of units is encouraged. See Policy 4.2.5 for limitations. Gross acreage includes the property at issue plus a share of adjacent roads and any adjacent, permanently dedicated, open lands. Mixed-use development in which residential uses are proposed to be located in conjunction with nonresidential uses in the same or adjoining buildings on the same site shall be treated as nonresidential development. See Policy 3.1.3(d). 2 Usage intensity calculations shall include all people (e.g., employees, customers/visitors, etc.) who may be on the property at a single point in time, whether indoors or outside. 3 Open land requirements are intended to be applied with respect to an entire zone. This is typically accomplished as part of a community general plan or a specific plan, but may also apply to large (10 acres or more) development projects. See Policy 4.2.4 for definition of open land. 4 The uses listed here are ones that are explicitly prohibited regardless of whether they meet the intensity criteria. In addition to these explicitly prohibited uses, other uses will normally not be permitted in the respective compatibility zones because they do not meet the usage intensity criteria. 5 As part of certain real estate transactions involving residential property within any compatibility zone (that is, anywhere within an airport influence area), information regarding airport proximity and the existence of aircraft over flights must be disclosed. This requirement is set by state law. See Policy 4.4.2 for County of Riverside General Plan Amendment No. 960 Public Review Draft March 2014 39 details. Easement dedication and deed notice requirements indicated for specific compatibility zones apply only to new development and to reuse if discretionary approval is required. 6 The total number of people permitted on a project site at any time, except rare special events, must not exceed the indicated usage intensity times the gross acreage of the site. Rare special events are ones (such as an air show at the airport) for which a facility is not designed and normally not used and for which extra safety precautions can be taken as appropriate. 7 Clustering of nonresidential development is permitted. However, no single acre of a project site shall exceed the indicated number of people per acre. See Policy 4.2.5 for details. 8 An intensity bonus may be allowed if the building design includes features intended to reduce risks to occupants in the event of an aircraft collision with the building. See Policy 4.2.6 for details. 9 Hazards to flight include physical (e.g., tall objects), visual, and electronic forms of interference with the safety of aircraft operations. Land use development that may cause the attraction of birds to increase is also prohibited. See Policy 4.3.7. 10 Examples of highly noise-sensitive outdoor nonresidential uses that should be prohibited include amphitheaters and drive-in theaters. Caution should be exercised with respect to uses such as poultry farms and nature preserves. 11 Storage of aviation fuel and other aviation-related flammable materials on the airport is exempted from this criterion. Storage of up to 6,000 gallons of non- aviation flammable materials is also exempted. See Policy 4.2.3(c) for details. 12 Critical community facilities include power plants, electrical substations, and public communications facilities. See Policy 4.2.3(d) for details. 13 NLR = Noise Level Reduction, the outside-to-inside sound level attenuation that the structure provides. See Policy 4.1.6. 14 Objects up to 35 feet in height are permitted. However, the Federal Aviation Administration may require marking and lighting of certain objects. See Policy 4.3.6 for details. 15 This height criterion is for general guidance. Shorter objects normally will not be airspace obstructions unless situated at a ground elevation well above that of the airport. Taller objects may be acceptable if determined not be obstructions. See Policies 4.3.3 and 4.3.4. 16 Two options are provided for residential densities in Compatibility Zone D. Option (1) has a density limit of 0.2 dwelling units per acre (i.e., an average parcel size of at least 5.0 gross acres). Option (2) requires that the density be greater than 5.0 dwelling units per acre (i.e., an average parcel size less than 0.2 gross acres). The choice between these two options is at the discretion of the local land use jurisdiction. See Table 2B for explanation of rationale. All other criteria for Zone D apply to both options. 17 Discouraged uses should generally not be permitted unless no feasible alternative is available. 18 Although no explicit upper limit on usage intensity is defined for Zone E, land uses of the types listed—uses that attract very high concentrations of people in confined areas—are discouraged in locations below or near the principal arrival and departure flight tracks. This limitation notwithstanding, no use shall be prohibited in Zone E if its usage intensity is such that it would be permitted in Zone D. 19 Residential densities to be calculated on a net basis – the overall developable area of a project site exclusive of permanently dedicated open lands as defined in Policy 4.2.4 or other open space required for environmental purposes.
While the General Plan Land Use Element and Area Plan Land Use Map guide future development patterns in the Southwest Area Plan, additional policy guidance is necessary to address local land use issues that are unique to the area or that require special policies that go above and beyond those identified in the General Plan. The Local Land Use section provides a host of policies to address these issues. These policies may reinforce County of Riverside regulatory provisions, preserve special lands or historic structures, require or encourage particular design features or guidelines, or restrict certain activities. The intent is to enhance and/or preserve the identity and character of this unique area.
The Southwest Area Plan Land Use Plan identifies one community center overlay within the planning area southerly of Scott Road and westerly of Winchester Road. The Community Center land use overlay allows the property to be developed pursuant to a specific plan proposing an unique mix of employment, commercial, public, and residential uses. In order to promote a
Community Center Guidelines have been prepared to aid in the physical development of vibrant community centers in Riverside County. These guidelines are intended to be illustrative in nature, establishing a general framework for design while allowing great flexibility and innovation in their application. Their purpose is to ensure that community centers develop into the diverse and dynamic urban places they are intended to be. These guidelines will serve as the basis for the creation of specified community center implementation tools such as zoning classifications and specific plan design guidelines.
The Community Center Guidelines are located in Appendix J of the General Plan.
County of Riverside General Plan Amendment No. 960 40 Public Review Draft March 2014 compact mixture of these uses and to help bring about an ambiance tailored to the pedestrian, voluntary incentives may be necessary to promote this more efficient form of land development. Policies: SWAP 12.1 Require that the area designated as Community Center Overlay be designed and developed as one specific plan of land use, or as part of a larger specific plan. SWAP 12.2 Provide incentives, such as density bonuses and regulatory concessions to property owners and developers, to facilitate the development of community centers as designated on the Southwest Area Plan Land Use Plan, Figure 3. SWAP 12.3 Ensure that community centers development adheres to those policies listed in the Community Centers Area Plan land use designation section of the General Plan Land Use Element. Mount Palomar Nighttime Lighting Requirements The Mount Palomar Observatory, located just outside of the Southwest planning area in San Diego County, requires unique nighttime lighting standards in order to allow the night sky to be viewed clearly. The following policies are intended to limit light leakage and spillage that may obstruct or hinder the observatory’s view. Please see Figure 6, Mt. Palomar Nighttime Lighting Policy for areas that may be impacted by these standards.
SWAP 13.1 Adhere to the lighting requirements of county ordinances for standards that are intended to limit light leakage and spillage that may interfere with the operations of the Palomar Observatory. Third and Fifth Supervisorial District Design Standards and Guidelines In July 2001, the County of Riverside adopted a set of design guidelines applicable to new development within the Third and Fifth Supervisorial Districts. The Development Design Standards and Guidelines for the Third and Fifth Supervisorial Districts are for use by property owners and design professionals submitting development applications to the Riverside County Planning Department. The guidelines have been adopted to advance several specific development goals of the Third and Fifth Districts. These goals include: ensuring that the building of new homes is interesting and varied in appearance; utilizing building materials that promote a look of quality development now and in the future; encouraging efficient land use while promoting high quality communities; incorporating conveniently located parks, trails, and open space into designs; and encouraging commercial and industrial developers to utilize designs and materials that evoke a sense of quality and permanence.
when too much artificial illumination enters the night sky and reflects off of airborne water droplets and dust particles causing a condition known as skyglow. It occurs when glare from improperly aimed and unshielded light fixtures cause uninvited illumination to cross property lines.
The Community Center Guidelines are located in Appendix J of the General Plan.
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